Faculty



 

Media Studies

Bryant, Mark
Frick, Caroline
Fuller, Jennifer
Gopalan, Lalitha
Jennings, Steve
Kackman, Michael
Kearney, Mary Celeste
Kumar, Shanti
Mallapragada, Madhavi
McLeland, Susan
Pennycook, Bruce
Ramirez Berg, Charles
Rodriguez, America
Schatz, Tom
Sebok, Bryan
Staiger, Janet
Stein, Laura
Straubhaar, Joe
Strover, Sharon
Tyner, Kathleen
Watkins, S. Craig
Wilkins, Karin
 

Production & Screenwriting

Akel, Mike
Blood, John
Burton, Toddy
Dietz, Steven
Douglas, Sam
Foshko, Robert
Garrison, Andrew
Henry, Kyle
Howard, Don
Jacobs, Matthew
Kelban, Stuart
Kelly, Susan
Knight, Dan
Kocher, Karen
Krukowski, Samantha
Lewis, Anne
Lewis, Richard
Mader, Berndt
Marslett, Geoff
Mims, Steve
Orillion, Kathleen
Panov, Mitko
Parsons, Spencer
Pennycook, Bruce
Pierson, John
Ramirez Berg, Charles
Rice, Scott
Schiesari, Nancy
Shea, Andrew
Smith, Alex
Smith, Ya'Ke
Spiro, Ellen
Stavchansky, Arie
Steinbauer, Ben
Stekler, Paul
Stone, Allucquere Rosanne
Thorne, Beau
Zander Mason, Diane

Stuart Kelban

Assistant Professor

Stuart Kelban

E-mail: stuartkelban@mail.utexas.edu
Office: UA9 2.112F
Phone: 512-232-6037
M.F.A., University of Virginia, 1989
Curriculum Vitae - PDF

Stuart Kelban is a professional screenwriter with experience writing for feature films and television, for both network and cable outlets. A Writers Guild of America member, he has sold screenplays to many of the major studios and productions companies in Los Angeles .

Stuart’s original feature screenplays include:

End-Game, a spy-thriller bought by Mandalay Pictures and Paramount Studios, with Peter Guber producing, and Sean Connery attached as actor and producer.

Shades of Grey, a legal drama set in Brooklyn , New York ,

developed for 20th Century Fox Studios, with Denzel Washington attached as actor and producer.

Black September, an action-drama, developed for Sony Studios, with John Woo attached as director and producer.

Double-Play, a con movie, financed by Stratus Pictures, developed with the director Dean Perisot.

Stealing Hearts, a romantic road-movie, optioned by Warner Brothers Studios, with Goldie Hawn attached as actor and producer; Arnold Kopelson producing.

Stuart’s television work includes:

Killer Elite, a 6-part miniseries written for HBO, based on the American Society of Magazine Editors award-winning book Generation Kill by Evan Wright, a “Rolling Stone” journalist embedded with the first Marine platoon to cross into Iraq during the current war.

The Samurai, a drama pilot, written for NBC, with NBC Productions producing. Jeff Goldblum attached as actor.

Three Card Monte, a drama pilot, written for UPN, with Mel Gibson and Icon Productions producing.

Paradise Pawn, spec drama pilot.

Stuart’s short fiction has been published in several national literary journals, including The Carolina Quarterly, The Crescent Review and Padan Aram—several of his humor pieces were also published in The Harvard Lampoon, where he served as an editor. Stuart received his MFA in fiction-writing from the University of Virginia at Charlottesville , where he studied under a Henry Hoyns’ Fellowship, and was awarded The Griffis Prize for short fiction. His award-winning story “Foreigners” was based on his experience working in a United Nations sponsored refugee camp for Cambodian refugees, where Stuart supervised a printing press with over 50 workers, printing over 25,000 reading books, medical manuals and educational materials – the largest printer of Khmer-language texts outside of Phnom Penh.

Before coming to the University of Texas at Austin , Stuart taught screenwriting, fiction-writing and literature at various Boston-area schools, including Emerson College , Boston College , Harvard University and Northeastern University . While living in Boston , Stuart cowrote and coproduced several short films. He is a diehard Red Sox fan.

    

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